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{{Short description|Senior Nazi SS and police official}}
The title of '''SS and police leader''' ('''{{lang|de|SS- und Polizeiführer}}''') was used to designate a senior [[Nazi Party]] official who commanded large units of the [[Schutzstaffel|SS]], [[Gestapo]] and the German uniformed police (''[[Ordnungspolizei]]''), prior to and during [[World War II]].
The title of '''SS and Police Leader''' (''{{lang|de|SS und Polizeiführer}}'') designated a senior [[Nazi Party]] official who commanded various components of the [[Schutzstaffel|SS]] and the German uniformed police (''[[Ordnungspolizei]]''), before and during [[World War II]] in the [[Third Reich|German Reich]] proper and in the [[German-occupied Europe|occupied territories]].
 
== Levels ==
Three levels of subordination were established for bearers of this title:
Three levels of subordination were established for holders of this title:
 
* '''SS and Police Leader''' (''SS- und Polizeiführer''), SSPF)
* '''Higher SS and Police Leader''' (''Höherer SS- und Polizeiführer'', HSSPF, HSS-PF, HSSuPF)
* '''Supreme SS and Police Leader''' (''Höchster SS- und Polizeiführer'', HöSSPF)
 
== HistoryEstablishment ==
The office of ''Höherer SS- und Polizeiführer'' (Higher SS and Police Leader, HSSPF) was authorized by a decree of 13 November 1937, signed by Reich [[Interior Minister]] [[Wilhelm Frick]]. This decree authorized the creation of HSSPF in each of the 13 [[Wehrmacht|German armed forces]] ''[[Wehrkreis]]e'' (Military Districts) in the German Reich, but only in the event of [[mobilization]]. At that time, the HSSPF would serve as deputies to [[Heinrich Himmler]], the ''[[Reichsführer-SS]]'' and Chief of the German Police, for the purpose of coordinating and integrating all local and regional SS and police formations into the defense organization of the Reich. The first HSSPF activated were those appointed in the ''Wehrkreise'' bordering [[Federal State of Austria|Austria]] during the ''[[Anschluss]]'' crisis in March 1938, and [[Czechoslovakia]] during the summer and autumn of the same year.<ref>[https://www.museumoftolerance.com/education/archives-and-reference-library/online-resources/simon-wiesenthal-center-annual-volume-6/annual-6-chapter-10.html On the Historiography of the SS] in [https://www.museumoftolerance.com/ Museum of Tolerance] Retrieved 14 February 2022.</ref>
The first Higher SS and Police Leaders were appointed in 1937<ref name=yerg22>Yerger, p. 22.</ref> from the existing ''[[SS-Oberabschnitt]]'' ''Führer'' (leaders of the main districts). The purpose of the Higher SS and Police Leader was to be a direct command authority for every SS and police unit in a given geographical region with such authority answering only to ''[[Reichsführer-SS]]'' [[Heinrich Himmler]] and [[Adolf Hitler]]. They were to act as the highest liaison under Himmler and "unifier" for command of the SS and police in a region.<ref name=yerg22/>
 
Appointments to these posts came from the ranks of existing ''[[SS-Oberabschnitt]]e'' ''Führer'' (SS Main District Leaders), and in nearly all instances they held both positions simultaneously. The ''Oberabschnitte'' were the SS commands in each of the ''Wehrkreise''. The purpose of the Higher SS and Police Leader was to be a direct command authority for every SS and police unit in these given geographical regions, answering only to Himmler and, through him, to [[Adolf Hitler]]. They were to act as Himmler's chief liaison to, and unifier of, all [[Allgemeine SS|SS]] and police components in a region.{{sfn|Yerger|1997|p=22}}
Inside the Reich, the man referred to as HSSPF was usually also ''[[SS-Oberabschnitt]] Führer'' for that region. In the occupied territories, there was no ''Oberabschnitt'', so the HSSPF existed on their own. However, they had something the Reich HSSPFs did not – several ''SS- und Polizeiführer'' (SSPF) reporting to them.<ref>Yerger, pp. 22, 52.</ref> There were two ''Höchster SS- und Polizeiführer'' (Supreme SS and Police Leader) posts; these were ''Italien'' (1943–1945) and ''Ukraine'' (1943–1944), both of which had various HSSPF and SSPF reporting to them.<ref>Yerger, pp. 22–25.</ref>
 
After the March 1938 ''Anschluss'' when Austria was absorbed into the German Reich, two new ''Wehrkreise'' and corresponding HSSPF were established there as well. Likewise, after the October 1939 conquest of [[Second Polish Republic|Poland]], two additional ''Wehrkreise'' and corresponding HSSPF were created for those Polish areas that were directly incorporated into the Reich.{{sfn|Yerger|1997|pp=36-37, 39-40}}
The SS and police leaders directly commanded a headquarters staff with representatives from almost every branch of the SS and the uniformed police. This typically included the ''[[Ordnungspolizei]]'' (Orpo; regular [[police]]), [[Gestapo]] ([[secret police]]), ''[[Totenkopfverbände]]'' (SS-TV; [[Nazi concentration camps]]), [[Sicherheitsdienst|SD]] ([[intelligence service]]), and certain units of the [[Waffen-SS]] ([[combat]] units). Most of these SS and Police Leaders normally held the rank of SS-''[[Gruppenführer]]'' or above and answered directly to Himmler in all matters pertaining to the SS within their area of responsibility. Their role was to be part of the SS control mechanism within the state policing the German population and overseeing the activities of the SS men within each respective district.{{sfn|Koehl|2004|pp=144, 148, 169, 176–177}} The men in these positions could bypass the main [[command hierarchy|chain of command]] of the administrative offices in their district for the SS, SD, SiPo, SS-TV and Orpo under the "guise of an emergency situation" thereby gaining direct operational control of these groups.{{sfn|McNab|2009|p=165}}
 
In all other occupied territories, no ''Wehrkreise'' were established, so the HSSPF were independent commands with several subordinate ''SS- und Polizeiführer'' (SS and Police Leader, SSPF) commands reporting to them. These positions were created beginning in November 1939 to assist the HSSPF in administering the large areas under their jurisdiction.{{sfn|Yerger|1997|pp=22, 52}}
Himmler authorized SS and Police Bases (''SS- und Polizeistützpunkte'') to be established in occupied Poland and occupied areas of the Soviet Union. They were to be "armed industrialized agricultural complexes". They would also maintain order in the areas they were established. They did not go beyond the planning stage.<ref>Ingrao, Charles W.; Szabo, Franz A. J. (2008). ''The Germans and the East''. [[Purdue University Press]], p. 288. [https://books.google.com/books?id=IHAcEB8jh1AC&pg=PA288]</ref>
 
Finally, in the autumn of 1943, Himmler created two ''Höchster SS- und Polizeiführer'' (Supreme SS and Police Leader, HöSSPF) posts with jurisdiction over very large territories; these were ''Italien'' (1943–1945) and ''Ukraine'' (1943–1944), each of which had both HSSPF and SSPF reporting to them.{{sfn|Yerger|1997|pp=23-25}}
In 1944 and 1945, many HSSPF were promoted to general's rank in the [[Waffen-SS]] by Himmler. This was apparently an attempt to provide potential protection under the [[Hague Conventions (1907)|Hague Convention]] rules of warfare.<ref>{{cite web
| url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/08-05-46.asp
| title = Nuremberg Trial Proceedings Volume 20 day 195
| publisher = Avalon Project, Yale Law School
| access-date = 2009-01-03
}}</ref>
 
== Operations ==
== Crimes against humanity==
The SS and Police Leaders directly commanded a headquarters staff with representatives from almost every branch of the SS and the police. This typically included the ''[[Ordnungspolizei]]'' (Orpo; regular [[police]]), [[Sicherheitspolizei|SiPo]] (security police) including the [[Gestapo]] ([[secret police]]), ''[[Totenkopfverbände]]'' (SS-TV; [[Nazi concentration camps]]), [[Sicherheitsdienst|SD]] ([[intelligence service]]), and certain units of the [[Waffen-SS]] ([[combat]] units). Most of the HSSPF normally held the rank of SS-''[[Gruppenführer]]'' or above, and answered directly to Himmler in all matters pertaining to the SS within their area of responsibility. Most SSPF normally held the rank of SS-''[[Oberführer]]'' or SS-''[[Brigadeführer]]'' and reported to their HSSPF. The role of all SS and Police Leaders was to be part of the SS control mechanism within their jurisdiction, policing the population and overseeing the activities of the SS men within each respective district.{{sfn|Koehl|2004|pp=144, 148, 169, 176–177}} The HSSPF could bypass the [[command hierarchy|chain of command]] of the administrative offices for the SS, SD, SiPo, SS-TV and Orpo in their district under the "guise of an emergency situation", thereby gaining direct operational control of these groups.{{sfn|McNab|2009|p=165}}
[[File:Hsspf decrypt 1.png|right|thumb|decrypted wireless telegram from "HSSPF Russland Mitte" (middle Russia) in 1942, reporting to Himmler the 'liquidation' of a village in [[Belarus]] (from [[National Security Agency|NSA]] report<ref name=nsadecrypt1/>)]]
[[File:Hsspf decrypt 2.png|right|thumb|Another decrypt, 1941, HSSPF Russland Sud (south Russia), reporting to Himmler the 'liquidation' of Jewish people (from NSA report<ref name=nsadecrypt2/>)]]
 
Himmler authorized SS and Police Bases (''SS- und Polizeistützpunkte'') to be established in occupied Poland and occupied areas of the [[Soviet Union]]. They were to be "armed industrialized agricultural complexes" to maintain order where they were established. This did not go beyond the planning stage.<ref>Ingrao, Charles W.; Szabo, Franz A. J. (2008). ''The Germans and the East.'' [[Purdue University Press]], p. 288. [https://books.google.com/books?id=IHAcEB8jh1AC&pg=PA288]</ref>
The SS and Police Leaders served as commanding SS generals for any ''[[Einsatzgruppen]]'' ([[death squad]]s) operating in their area. This entailed ordering the deaths of tens of thousands of persons and, following the end of World War II, most SS and Police Leaders who had served in [[History of Poland (1939–1945)|Poland]] and the [[Soviet Union]] were charged with [[war crime]]s and [[crimes against humanity]].{{cn|date=September 2018}}
 
In 1944 and 1945, many HSSPF were promoted to their corresponding general's rank in the [[Waffen-SS]] by Himmler. This was apparently an attempt to provide potential protection for them, by giving them [[combatant]] status under the [[Hague Conventions (1907)|Hague Convention]] rules of warfare.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/08-05-46.asp| title = Nuremberg Trial Proceedings Volume 20 day 195| publisher = Avalon Project, Yale Law School| access-date = 2009-01-03}}</ref>
The SS and Police Leaders were the overseeing authority of the Jewish [[ghetto]]s in Poland and, as such, directly coordinated deportations to Nazi [[extermination camps]] with the administrative help of the [[RSHA]]. They had direct command over [[Order Police battalions]] and SD regiments that were assigned to guard the ghettos.{{cn|date=September 2018}}
 
==List ofWar SScrimes and policecrimes leadersagainst humanity==
[[File:Hsspf decrypt 1.png|right|thumb|decrypted wireless telegram from "HSSPF Russland Mitte" (middle Russia) in 1942, reporting to Himmler the 'liquidation' of a village in [[Belarus]] (from [[National Security Agency|NSA]] report<ref name=nsadecrypt1/>)]]
[[File:Hsspf decrypt 2.png|right|thumb|Another decrypt, 1941, HSSPF Russland Sud (south Russia), reporting to Himmler the 'liquidation' of Jewish people (from NSA report<ref name=nsadecrypt2/>)]]
 
The SS and Police Leaders were key figures in many of the [[war crime]]s committed by SS personnel. The HSSPF served as commanding SS generals for any ''[[Einsatzgruppen]]'' ([[death squad]]s) operating in their area. This entailed ordering the deaths of tens of thousands of persons. In addition, they launched anti-[[Partisan (military)|partisan]] operations and directed police units to acquire [[Forced labour under German rule during World War II|forced labor]] for war-related projects.{{sfn|McNab|2009|p=166}}
{{main article|List of SS and police commands}}
 
The SS and Police Leaders were the overseeing authority of the [[Jews|Jewish]] [[Nazi ghettos|ghettos]] in Poland and directly coordinated deportations to Nazi [[extermination camps]]. They had direct command over [[Order Police battalions]] and SD regiments that were assigned to guard the ghettos. The HSSPF regularly provided SS and police guards and other support personnel for the transports to the death camps, and also negotiated with the agencies and ministries of the Reich for rolling stock, supplies and provisions, rail schedules, and an array of other requirements necessary to keep the roundups and the death trains moving efficiently. And, in the satellite and client states, the HSSPF negotiated directly with the [[puppet state|puppet]] or [[Collaboration with Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy|collaborationist]] governments to hand over their Jews for deportation to the East. Finally, the HSSPF were also directly involved in the construction and operation of the extermination camps.<ref>[https://www.museumoftolerance.com/education/archives-and-reference-library/online-resources/simon-wiesenthal-center-annual-volume-6/annual-6-chapter-10.html On the Historiography of the SS] in [https://www.museumoftolerance.com/ Museum of Tolerance] Retrieved 14 February 2022.</ref> Following the end of the war, many SS and Police Leaders, particularly those who had served in Poland and the Soviet Union, either committed [[suicide]] or were charged with [[war crime]]s and [[crimes against humanity]].{{sfn|Yerger|1997|p=23}}
Note &ndash; Men were often transferred and promoted as the war went on. The HSSPF areas themselves might change, be absorbed, cease to exist, etc. This list is by no means exhaustive.<ref group="Note">Yerger lists about 37 separate HSSPF posts, most of which had several different commanders over the lifetime of the post. He also lists over 50 SSPF posts, many of which had several commanders.</ref>
 
==Tables==
'''HöSSPF'''
There were two HöSSPF commands and 38 HSSPF commands, 19 in the Reich and 19 in the occupied lands. Most of these had several different commanders over the lifetime of the post.{{sfn|Yerger|1997|pp=25-51}} Similarly, there were 49 SSPF commands subordinated to those HSSPF leaders in the occupied territories, also with multiple commanders over the years. Some of these areas were renamed, merged, or dissolved during the duration of their existence, particularly as German military control over the eastern territories was relentlessly eroded later in the war.{{sfn|Yerger|1997|pp=52-81}}
 
The tables below provide as complete an accounting of the SS and police commands and their leaders as is known. They list the permanent appointees, but omit any substitutes who temporarily acted in that capacity when the incumbent was on leave or on another assignment.
* [[Karl Wolff]] &ndash; "Italien"
* [[Hans-Adolf Prützmann]] &ndash; "Ukraine"
 
{| class="wikitable"
'''HSSPF'''
|+ Table of Supreme SS and Police Leader (HöSSPF) Commands{{sfn|Yerger|1997|pages=23-25}}
* [[August Meyszner]] &ndash; Serbia and [[Montenegro]]
! SS Designation !! Area !! HQ !! HöSSPF !! Dates
* [[Hermann Behrends]] &ndash; Serbia and [[Montenegro]]
|-
* [[Udo von Woyrsch]] &ndash; "Elbe"
|''Italien'' || [[Italian Social Republic|Italy]] || [[Rome]];<br />[[Verona]];<br />[[Bolzano]] || [[Karl Wolff]] || September 1943 – May 1945
* [[Carl Oberg]] &ndash; [[German occupation of France during World War II|France]]
|-
* [[Ernst Kaltenbrunner]] &ndash; [[Danube|Donau]]
|''Ukraine'' || [[Ukraine]] || [[Kiev]] || [[Hans-Adolf Prützmann]] || October 1943 – September 1944
* [[Karl Hermann Frank]] &ndash; [[Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia]]
|}
* [[Friedrich Jeckeln]] &ndash; [[Soviet Union|Northern Russia]]
* [[Richard Hildebrandt]] &ndash; [[Black Sea]]
* [[Erwin Rösener]] &ndash; [[SS-Oberabschnitt Alpenland|Alpenland]]
* [[Odilo Globocnik|Odilo "Globus" Globocnik]] &ndash; [[Operational Zone Adriatic Coast|Adriatic Coast]]
* [[Hanns Albin Rauter]] &ndash; [[Netherlands]]
* [[Erich von dem Bach]] &ndash; Central Russia
* [[Wilhelm Rediess]] &ndash; Norway
* [[Günther Pancke]] &ndash; Denmark
* [[Jürgen Stroop]], then [[Walter Schimana]], then [[Hermann Franz]] &ndash; Greece
* [[Friedrich-Wilhelm Krüger]], then [[Wilhelm Koppe]] &ndash; [[General Government]] (Poland)
* [[Karl von Eberstein]] – Munich area of Germany
* [[Franz Walter Stahlecker]] – [[Reichskommissariat Ostland]] (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Belarus)
 
{| class="wikitable"
'''SSPF'''
|+ Table of Higher SS and Police Leader (HSSPF) Commands in the German Reich<br /><small>(By [[Wehrkreis]])</small>{{sfn|Yerger|1997|pages=25-40}}
! SS Designation !! ''Wehrkreis'' !! Area !! HQ !! HSSPF !! Dates
|-
| ''Nordost'' ||I || [[East Prussia]] || [[Königsberg]] || [[Wilhelm Rediess]]<br/>[[Jakob Sporrenberg]]<br/>[[Hans-Adolf Prützmann]] || June 1938 – June 1940<br/>June 1940 – May 1941<br/>May 1941 – May 1945
|-
| ''Ostsee''<br/>(<small>''Nord'' prior to April 1940</small>) || II || [[Pomerania]]<br/>[[Mecklenburg]] || [[Stettin]] || [[Emil Mazuw]] || August 1938 – May 1945
|-
| ''Spree''<br/>(<small>''Ost'' prior to November 1939)</small> || III || [[Berlin]]<br/>[[Brandenburg]] || Berlin || [[August Heissmeyer]] || September 1939 – May 1945
|-
| ''Elbe'' || IV || [[Saxony]]<br/>[[Province of Halle-Merseburg|Halle-Merseburg]] || [[Dresden]] || [[Theodor Berkelmann]]<br/>[[Udo von Woyrsch]]<br/>[[Ludolf-Hermann von Alvensleben]] || June 1938 – April 1940<br/>April 1940 – February 1944<br/>February 1944 – May 1945
|-
| ''Südwest'' || V || [[Free People's State of Württemberg|Württemberg]]<br/>[[Republic of Baden|Baden]]<br/> [[Alsace]] || [[Stuttgart]] || [[Kurt Kaul ]]<br/>[[Otto Hofmann]] || September 1939 – April 1943<br/>April 1943 – May 1945
|-
| ''West'' || VI || [[Westphalia]]<br/>Northern [[Rhineland Province|Rheinland]] || [[Düsseldorf]] || [[Fritz Weitzel]]<br/>[[Theodor Berkelmann]]<br/>[[Friedrich Jeckeln]]<br/>[[Karl Gutenberger]] || June 1938 – April 1940<br/> April 1940 – July 1940 <br/> July 1940 – June 1941<br/> July 1941 – May 1945
|-
| ''Süd'' || VII || [[Upper Bavaria]]<br/>[[Swabia]] || [[Munich]] || [[Karl von Eberstein]]<br/>[[Wilhelm Koppe]] || March 1938 – April 1945<br/>April 1945 – May 1945
|-
| ''Südost'' || VIII || [[Province of Silesia|Silesia]] || [[Breslau]] || [[Ernst-Heinrich Schmauser]]<br/>[[Richard Hildebrandt]] || May 1941 – February 1945<br/>February 1945 – May 1945
|-
| ''Fulda-Werra'' ||IX || [[People's State of Hesse|Hesse]]<br/>[[Province of Hesse-Nassau|Hesse-Nassau]]<br/>[[Thuringia]] || [[Arolsen]] || [[Josias, Hereditary Prince of Waldeck and Pyrmont|Josias zu Waldeck und Pyrmont]] || October 1938 – May 1945
|-
| ''Nordsee''<br/><small>(''Nordwest'' prior to April 1940)</small> || X || [[Province of Schleswig-Holstein|Schleswig-Holstein]]<br/>Northern [[Province of Hanover|Hanover]]<br/>[[Hamburg]]<br/>[[Free State of Oldenburg|Oldenburg]]<br/>[[Bremen]] || Hamburg || [[Hans-Adolf Prützmann]]<br/>[[Rudolf Querner]]<br/>[[Georg-Henning Graf von Bassewitz-Behr]] || June 1938 – April 1941<br/>May 1941 – January 1943<br/>February 1943 – May 1945
|-
| ''Mitte'' || XI || [[Free State of Anhalt|Anhalt]]<br/>[[Free State of Brunswick|Brunswick]]<br />Southern [[Province of Hanover|Hanover]]<br/>[[Province of Magdeburg|Magdeburg]] || [[Hanover]] || [[Friedrich Jeckeln]]<br/>[[Günther Pancke]]<br/>[[Wilhelm Fuchs]]<br/>[[Hermann Höfle]]<br/>[[Rudolf Querner]] || June 1938 – July 1940<br/> July 1940 – July 1943<br/>July 1943 – September 1943<br>September 1943 – October 1944<br/>October 1944 – May 1945
|-
| ''Rhein''<br/><small>(Merged with ''Westmark'' in May 1943 to form ''Rhein-Westmark'')</small> || XII || Southern [[Rhineland Province|Rheinland]]<br/>[[Palatinate (region)|Palatinate]]<br/>[[Saarland]] <small>(to July 1940)</small><br />[[Luxembourg]] <small>(from July 1940)</small> || [[Wiesbaden]] || [[Richard Hildebrandt]]<br/>[[Jakob Sporrenberg]]<br />[[Erwin Rösener]]<br/>[[Theodor Berkelmann]] || April 1939 – October 1939<br/>October 1939 – July 1940<br />July 1940– November 1941<br/>December 1941 – May 1943
|-
| ''Westmark''<br /><small>(''Lothringen-Saarpfalz'' prior to February 1941)<br />(Merged with ''Rhein'' in May 1943 to form ''Rhein-Westmark'')</small>|| XII || [[Saarland]]<br/>[[Lorraine]] || [[Metz]];<br />[[Saarbrücken]] || [[Theodor Berkelmann]] || July 1940 – May 1943
|-
| ''Rhein-Westmark'' || XII || Southern [[Rhineland Province|Rheinland]]<br/>[[Palatinate (region)|Palatinate]]<br/>[[Luxembourg]]<br/>[[Saarland]]<br />[[Lorraine]] || [[Wiesbaden]] || [[Theodor Berkelmann]]<br/>[[Jürgen Stroop]] || May 1943 – November 1943<br/>November 1943 – May 1945
|-
| ''Main'' || XIII || [[Franconia]]<br/>[[Lower Bavaria]]<br/>[[Upper Palatinate]] || [[Nuremberg]] || <br/>[[Karl von Eberstein]]<br/>[[Benno Martin]] || March 1938 – December 1942<br/>December 1942 – May 1945
|-
| ''Donau'' || XVII || [[Lower Austria]]<br/>[[Upper Austria]] || [[Vienna]] || [[Ernst Kaltenbrunner]]<br/>[[Rudolf Querner]]<br/>[[Walter Schimana]] || September 1938 – January 1943<br/>January 1943 – October 1944<br/> October 1944 – May 1945
|-
| ''Alpenland'' || XVIII || [[Carinthia]]<br/>[[Salzburg (state)|Salzburg]]<br/>[[Styria]]<br/>[[Tyrol (state)|Tyrol]]<br/> [[Vorarlberg]] || [[Salzburg]] || [[Alfred Rodenbücher]]<br/>[[Gustav Adolf Scheel]]<br/>[[Erwin Rösener]] || April 1939 – April 1941<br/> April 1941 – November 1941<br/>November 1941 – May 1945
|-
| ''Weichsel'' || XX || [[Reichsgau Danzig-West Prussia]] || [[Danzig]] || [[Richard Hildebrandt]]<br/>[[Fritz Katzmann]] ||September 1939 – April 1943<br/>April 1943 – May 1945
|-
| ''Warthe'' || XXI || [[Reichsgau Wartheland]] || [[Poznań|Posen]] || [[Wilhelm Koppe]]<br/>[[Theodor Berkelmann]]<br/>[[Heinz Reinefarth]]<br/>[[Willy Schmelcher]] || October 1939 – November 1943<br/>November 1943 – December 1943<br/>January 1944 – December 1944<br/>December 1944 – May 1945
|}
 
{| class="wikitable"
* [[Jürgen Stroop]] &ndash; [[Warsaw]]
|+ Table of Higher SS and Police Leader (HSSPF) Commands in the Occupied Territories<ref group=notes>
* [[Franz Kutschera]] &ndash; [[Mogilev]] & [[Warsaw]]
A further HSSPF command, to be known as ''Kaukasien'' was planned for the [[Caucasus]] in 1942 to be commanded by [[Gerret Korsemann]] but was never activated. The six SSPF commands that were to be subordinated to it were instead assigned to HSSPF ''Russland-Süd''. (Yerger, 1997, p.44)</ref><br /><small>(By date of establishment)</small>{{sfn|Yerger|1997|pages=39; 43-51}}
* [[Julian Scherner]] &ndash; [[Kraków]]
! SS Designation !! Area !! HQ !! HSSPF !! Dates
* [[Odilo Globocnik|Odilo "Globus" Globocnik]] &ndash; [[Lublin]]
|-
| ''Böhmen und Mähren'' || [[Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia]] || [[Prague]] || [[Karl Hermann Frank]]<br />[[Richard Hildebrandt]] || April 1939 – April 1945<br />April 1945 – May 1945
|-
| ''Ost'' || [[General Government]] || [[Kracow]] || [[Theodor Eicke]]<br/>[[Friedrich-Wilhelm Krüger]]<br/>[[Wilhelm Koppe]] || September 1939<br/>October 1939 – November 1943<br/>November 1943 – May 1945
|-
| ''Nord'' || [[Reichskommissariat Norwegen|Norway]] || [[Oslo]] || [[Fritz Weitzel]]<br/>[[Wilhelm Rediess]] || April 1940 – June 1940<br/>June 1940 – May 1945
|-
| ''Nordwest'' || [[Reichskommissariat Niederlande|Netherlands]] || [[The Hague]] || [[Hanns Albin Rauter]] || June 1940 – May 1945
|-
| ''Ostland und Russland-Nord'' || [[Reichskommissariat Ostland]] || [[Riga]] || [[Hans-Adolf Prützmann]]<br/>[[Friedrich Jeckeln]]<br/>[[Hermann Behrends]] || June 1941 – October 1941<br/>November 1941 – January 1945<br/>February 1945 – May 1945
|-
| ''Russland-Mitte'' <small>(To April 1943)</small><br />''Russland-Mitte und Weissruthenia'' || [[German occupation of Byelorussia during World War II|Belarus]] || [[Mogilev]];<br/>[[Minsk]] || [[Erich von dem Bach-Zelewski]]<br/>[[Curt von Gottberg]] || June 1941 – June 1944<br/>July 1944 – August 1944
|-
| ''Russland-Süd''<br /><small>(Subordinated to HöSSPF ''Ukraine'' from October 1943)</small> || [[Reichskommissariat Ukraine]] || [[Kiev]] || [[Friedrich Jeckeln]]<br/>[[Hans-Adolf Prützmann]] || June 1941 – October 1941<br/>November 1941 – March 1944
|-
|'' Serbien, Montenegro und Sandschak'' || [[Territory of the Military Commander in Serbia|Serbia]]<br/>[[ German-occupied territory of Montenegro|Montenegro]] || [[Belgrade]] || [[August Meyszner]]<br/>[[Hermann Behrends]] || January 1942 – April 1944<br/>April 1944 – October 1944
|-
| ''Frankreich'' || [[Occupied France]] || [[Paris]] || [[Carl Oberg]] || May 1942 – November 1944
|-
| ''Kroatien'' || [[Croatia]] || [[Zagreb]] || [[Konstantin Kammerhofer]] || March 1943 – January 1945
|-
| ''Operationszone Adriatisches Küstenland ''<small>(Subordinated to HöSSPF ''Italien'')</small>|| [[Operational Zone of the Adriatic Littoral]] || [[Trieste]] || [[Odilo Globocnik]] || September 1943 – May 1945
|-
| ''Griechenland'' || [[Occupied Greece|Greece]] || [[Athens]] || [[Jürgen Stroop]]<br/>[[Walter Schimana]]<br/>[[Hermann Franz]] || September 1943 – October 1943<br/>October 1943 – September 1944<br/>September 1944 – November 1944
|-
| ''Schwarzes Meer''<br /><small>(Subordinated to HöSSPF ''Ukraine'' from October 1943)</small><br />|| [[Black Sea]] coast || [[Mykolaiv|Nikolajew]] || [[Ludolf-Hermann von Alvensleben]]<br/>[[Richard Hildebrandt]] || October 1943 – December 1943<br/>December 1943 – September 1944
|-
| ''Dänemark'' || [[Denmark in World War II|Denmark]] || [[Copenhagen]] || [[Günther Pancke]] || October 1943 – May 1945
|-
| ''Ungarn'' || [[Kingdom of Hungary (1920–1946)]] || [[Budapest]] || [[Otto Winkelmann]] || March 1944 – February 1945
|-
| ''Belgien-Nordfrankreich'' || [[Reichskommissariat of Belgium and Northern France]] || [[Brussels]] || [[Richard Jungclaus]]<br/>[[Friedrich Jeckeln]] || August 1944 – September 1944<br/>September 1944 – January 1945
|-
| ''Albanien'' || [[German occupation of Albania|Albania]] || [[Tirana]] || [[Josef Fitzthum]] || August 1944 – December 1944
|-
| ''Slowakei'' || [[Slovak Republic (1939–1945)]] || [[Pressburg]] || [[Gottlob Berger]]<br/>[[Hermann Höfle]] || August 1944 – September 1944<br/ >September 1944 – May 1945
|-
| ''Siebenbürgen'' || [[Transylvania]] || – || [[Richard Hildebrandt]]<br /> [[Artur Phleps]] || August 1944 – September 1944<br/>September 1944
|}
 
{| class="wikitable"
|+ Table of SS and Police Leader (SSPF) Commands{{sfn|Yerger|1997|pages=52-81}}
! SS Designation !! Reported to HSSPF or HöSSPF* of: !! SS and Police Leader !! Dates
|-
|Aserbeidschan**||''Russland-Süd''||[[Konstantin Kammerhofer]]||November 1942 – April 1943
|-
|Awdejewka**||''Russland-Süd''<br />''Ukraine''*||[[Karl-Heinz Bürger]]||October 1942 – December 1943
|-
|Bergvölker-Ordshonikidse**||''Russland-Süd''||[[Wilhelm Günther]]||May 1942 – August 1942
|-
|Bialystok||''Russland-Mitte'' <small>(To April 1943)</small><br /> ''Russland-Mitte und Weissruthenia''||[[Werner Fromm]]<br />[[Otto Hellwig]]<br />[[Heinz Roch]]||January 1942 – January 1943<br />May 1943 – July 1944<br />July 1944 – October 1944
|-
|''Bozen''||''Italien''*||[[Karl Brunner (SS general)|Karl Brunner]]||September 1943 – May 1945
|-
|Charkow||''Russland-Süd''||[[Willy Tensfeld]]<br />[[Hans Haltermann]]<br />[[Günther Merk]]||August 1941 – May 1943<br />May 1943 – September 1943<br />September 1943 – October 1943
|-
|Dnjepropetrowsk-Krivoi-Rog||''Russland-Süd''<br />''Ukraine''*||[[Georg-Henning Graf von Bassewitz-Behr]]<br />[[Hermann Harm]]<br />[[Waldemar Wappenhans]]<br />[[Karl Schäfer (SS-Brigadeführer)|Karl Schäfer]]||November 1941 – August 1942<br />August 1942 – October 1942<br />October 1942 – October 1943<br />October 1943 – November 1943
|-
|''Estland''||''Ostland und Russland-Nord'' ||[[Hinrich Möller]]<br />[[Walther Schröder]]||August 1941 – April 1944<br />April 1944 – October 1944
|-
|''Friaul''<br /><small>(Renamed ''Adriatische-West'', April 1945)</small>||''Operationszone Adriatisches Küstenland ''||[[Ludolf Jakob von Alvensleben]]||October 1944 – May 1945
|-
|Görz||''Operationszone Adriatisches Küstenland '' ||[[Karl Taus]]||May 1944 – May 1945
|-
|''Istrien''||''Operationszone Adriatisches Küstenland '' ||[[Johann-Erasmus Freiherr von Malsen-Ponickau]] ||October 1944 – May 1945
|-
|''Kattowitz''||''Südost''||[[Christoph Diehm]]||October 1944 – May 1945
|-
|''Kaukasien''-Kuban**||''Russland-Süd''||[[Konstantin Kammerhofer]]<br />[[Theobald Thier]]||August 1942 – November 1942<br />November 1942 – May 1943
|-
|Kertsch-Tamanhalbinsel**||''Russland-Süd''||[[Theobald Thier]]||May 1943 – July 1943
|-
|''Kiew''||''Russland-Süd''<br />''Ukraine''*||[[Hans Haltermann]]<br />[[Paul Hennicke]]||October 1941 – May 1943<br />May 1943 – December 1943
|-
|''Krakau''||''Ost'' (General Government)||[[Karl Zech]]<br />[[Hans Schwedler]]<br />[[Julian Scherner]]<br />[[Theobald Thier]]||November 1939 – October 1940<br />October 1940 – August 1941<br />August 1941 – March 1944<br />March 1944 – January 1945
|-
|Lemberg||''Ost'' (General Government)||[[Fritz Katzmann]]<br />[[Theobald Thier]]<br />[[Christoph Diehm]]||August 1941 – April 1943<br />July 1943 – February 1944<br />February 1944 – September 1944
|-
|''Lettland''||''Ostland und Russland-Nord'' ||[[Walther Schröder]]||August 1941 – October 1944
|-
|''Litauen''||''Ostland und Russland-Nord''||[[Lucian Wysocki]]<br />[[Hermann Harm]]<br />[[Kurt Hintze]]||August 1941 – July 1943<br />July 1943 – April 1944<br />April 1944 – September 1944
|-
|Lublin||''Ost'' (General Government)||[[Odilo Globocnik]]<br />[[Jakob Sporrenberg]]||November 1939 – August 1943<br />August 1943 – November 1944
|-
|Metz||''Rhein-Westmark''||[[Anton Dunckern]]||October 1944 – November 1944
|-
|''Mittelitalien''-Verona||''Italien''*||[[Karl-Heinz Bürger]]||December 1943 – May 1945
|-
|''Mitte-Norwegen''||''Nord''||[[Richard Kaaserer]]||November 1944 – May 1945
|-
|Mogilew||''Russland-Mitte'' <small>(To April 1943)</small><br /> ''Russland-Mitte und Weissruthenia''||[[Georg-Henning Graf von Bassewitz-Behr]]<br />[[Franz Kutschera]]<br />[[Hans Haltermann]]||August 1942 – April 1943<br />April 1943 – September 1943<br />September 1943 – July 1944
|-
|Montenegro||''Serbien, Montenegro und Sandschak''||[[Richard Fiedler (SS-Brigadeführer)|Richard Fiedler]]||October 1943 – October 1944
|-
|Nikolajew||''Russland-Süd''<br />''Ukraine''*||[[Fritz Tittmann]]<br />[[Waldemar Wappenhans]]<br />[[Paul Zimmermann (SS-Brigadeführer)|Paul Zimmermann]]<br />[[Ludolf-Hermann von Alvensleben]]||October 1941 – September 1942<br/>September 1942 – April 1943<br />April 1943 – October 1943<br />October 1943 – February 1944
|-
|''Nord-Kaukasien''**||''Russland-Süd''||[[Karl-Heinz Bürger]]||August 1942 – October 1942
|-
|''Nord-Norwegen''||''Nord''||[[Heinz Roch]]||November 1944 – May 1945
|-
|''Ober-Elsaß''||''Südwest''||[[Friedrich Suhr]]||December 1944 – May 1945
|-
|''Oberitalien-Mitte''||''Italien''*||[[Ernst-Albrecht Hildebrandt]]||April 1944 – October 1944
|-
|''Oberitalien-West''||''Italien''*||[[Willy Tensfeld]]||January 1944 – May 1945
|-
|Pripet||''Russland-Mitte und Weissruthenia'' ||[[Ernst Hartmann (SS-Brigadeführer)|Ernst Hartmann]]||December 1943 – September 1944
|-
|Quarnero||''Operationszone Adriatisches Küstenland '' ||[[Wilhelm Traub]]||October 1944 – May 1945
|-
|Radom||''Ost'' (General Government)||[[Fritz Katzmann]]<br />[[Carl Oberg]]<br />[[Herbert Böttcher]]||November 1939 – August 1941<br />August 1941 – May 1942<br />May 1942 – January 1945
|-
|Rostow-Awdejewka||''Russland-Süd''||[[Richard Wendler]]<br />[[Gerret Korsemann]]<br />[[Paul Hennicke]]||January 1942 – May 1942<br />May 1942 – October 1942<br />October 1942 – May 1943
|-
|Rowno<br /><small>(Renamed Wolhynien-Luzk, September 1942)</small>||''Russland-Süd''<br />''Ukraine''*||[[Gerret Korsemann]]<br />[[Waldemar Wappenhans]]<br />[[Wilhelm Günther]]<br />[[Ernst Hartmann (SS-Brigadeführer)|Ernst Hartmann]]||August 1941 – January 1942<br />January 1942 – August 1942<br /> September 1942 – June 1944<br />June 1944 – September 1944
|-
|Salzburg||''Alpenland''||[[Erwin Schulz]]||April 1945 – May 1945
|-
|Sandschak||''Serbien, Montenegro und Sandschak''||[[Karl von Krempler]]<br />[[Richard Kaaserer]]||September 1943 – June 1944<br/>June 1944 – November 1944
|-
|Saratow||''Russland-Mitte''||[[Walter Schimana]]||September 1941 – November 1941
|-
|Shitomir||''Russland-Süd''<br />''Ukraine''*||[[Otto Hellwig]]<br />[[Willy Schmelcher]]<br />[[Ernst Hartmann (SS-Brigadeführer)|Ernst Hartmann]]<br />[[Christoph Diehm]]||October 1941 – May 1943<br />May 1943 – September 1943<br />October 1943 – January 1944<br />January 1944 – February 1944
|-
|Stalino-Donezgebiet||''Russland-Süd''||[[Hans Döring (SS-Brigadeführer)|Hans Döring]]<br />[[Willy Tensfeld]]||November 1941 – May 1943<br />May 1943 – September 1943
|-
|Stanislav-Rostow<br /><small>(Renamed Rostow-Awdejewka, January 1942)</small>||''Russland-Süd''||[[Richard Wendler]]||August 1941 – January 1942
|-
|''Süd-Norwegen''||''Nord''||[[Jakob Sporrenberg]]||November 1944 – May 1945
|-
|Taurien-Krim-Simferopol||''Russland-Süd''<br />''Ukraine''*||[[Ludolf-Hermann von Alvensleben]]<br />[[Heinz Roch]]<br />[[Richard Hildebrandt]]||November 1941 – October 1943<br />October 1943 – December 1943<br />December 1943 – September 1944
|-
|Triest||''Operationszone Adriatisches Küstenland ''||[[Georg Michalsen]]||October 1944 – May 1945
|-
|Tschernigow||''Russland-Süd''||[[Ludolf-Hermann von Alvensleben]]<br />[[Willy Schmelcher]]<br />[[Ernst Hartmann (SS-Brigadeführer)|Ernst Hartmann]]||October 1941 – November 1941<br />November 1941 – July 1943<br />July 1943 – October 1943
|-
|Warsaw||''Ost'' (General Government)||[[Paul Moder]]<br />[[Arpad Wigand]]<br />[[Jürgen Stroop]]<br />[[Franz Kutschera]]<br />[[Paul Otto Geibel]]||November 1939 – July 1941<br />August 1941 – April 1943<br />April 1943 – September 1943<br />September 1943 – February 1944<br />March 1944 – February 1945
|-
|''Weissruthenien''<br /><small>(Also known as Minsk)</small>||''Ostland und Russland-Nord''<br /><small>(To April 1943)</small><br />''Russland-Mitte und Weissruthenia''||[[Jakob Sporrenberg]]<br />[[Carl Zenner]]<br />[[Karl Schäfer (SS-Brigadeführer)|Karl Schäfer]]<br />[[Curt von Gottberg]]<br />[[Erich Ehrlinger]]||July 1941 – August 1941<br />August 1941 – May 1942<br />May 1942 – July 1942<br />July 1942 – September 1943<br />September 1943 – April 1944
|-
|Wolhynien-Brest-Litovsk<br /><small>(Merged with Rowno, 1 January 1942)</small>||''Russland-Süd''||[[Waldemar Wappenhans]]||September 1941 – December 1941
|}<small>**SSPF originally slated to be assigned to HSSPF ''Kaukasien''.</small>
 
==See also==
* [[GlossaryList of NaziSS Germanyand police commands]]
* [[List of Nazi Party leaders and officials]]
* [[List of SS personnel]]
* [[Glossary of Nazi Germany]]
 
==Notes==
{{Reflist|group="Note"}}
 
== References ==
 
===Notes===
{{reflist|group=notes}}
 
===Citations===
Line 98 ⟶ 269:
 
===Bibliography===
*{{cite book | last = Koehl | first = Robert | title = The SS: A History 1919–45 | publisher = Tempus | location = Stroud | year = 2004 | isbn = 978-0-75242-559-7 }}
*{{cite book | last = McNab | first = Chris | title = The SS: 1923–1945 | publisher = Amber Books | location = London | year = 2009 | isbn = 978-1-90662690662-49649-5 }}
*{{cite book | last = Yerger | first = Mark C. | year = 1997 | title= Allgemeine-SS: The Commands, Units and Leaders of the General SS | publisher =Schiffer Publishing Ltd. | isbn = 0-7643-0145-4 }}
 
==Further reading==
*{{cite book | last = HöhneBirn | first = HeinzRuth Bettina | title = TheDie OrderHoheren ofSS- theund Death's HeadPolizeiführer: TheHimmlers StoryVertreter ofim Hitler'sReich SSund |in publisherden =besetzten PenguinGebieten | yearpublisher = 2001Droste Verlag | orig-year = 19691986 | isbn = 978-03-1413977000-012710-3 }}
*{{cite book | last = Höhne | first = Heinz | title = The Order of the Death's Head: The Story of Hitler's SS | publisher = Penguin | year = 2001 | orig-year = 1969 | isbn = 978-0-14139-012-3}}
 
{{SS organizations}}